Brexit march London: Host of celebs and MPs joins thousand of protesters in call for final say on deal

Rebecca Speare-Cole19 October 2019
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A host of celebrities and politicians joined the People's Vote march in London as thousands call for a final say on Brexit.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan was pictured alongside Sir Patrick and actor Stephen McGann at the front of the crowd as the march set off from Park Lane on Saturday afternoon.

Protesters cheered as they learned Boris Johnson had lost a key Commons vote where MPs voted for withholding their approval of the deal until the legislation to implement it was in place.

Sir Patrick Stewart praised protesters for keeping up the fight for a second EU referendum as he spoke to crowds outside Parliament.

British actor Patrick Stewart speaks on stage in Parliament Square
AFP via Getty Images

Sir Patrick said the crowd has proven a second referendum was not the "pipe dream" that opponents have described it as.

He said: "You haven't just filled a nice bar in north London, you have taken over an entire city. You haven't just impacted the Brexit debate, you have transformed British politics."

Sir Patrick added there was "nothing democratic" about the 2016 referendum.

"People weren't just misled, they were lied to," said Sir Patrick.

Effigies of the Prime Minister have been held aloft by protesters at the demonstration, with some accompanied by their pets draped in EU flags, on the People's Vote march to Westminster.

Sadiq Khan also spoke to crowds, thanking the attendees for not judging the current mayor of London on the actions of the past mayor of London.

He said that EU citizens are part of what make London a great city. "They are our friends, members of our family, they are our colleagues," he said.

Demonstrators with placards and EU and Union flags gather in Parliament Square in central London
AFP via Getty Images

"Over the last three years they have been feeling anxious, worried and heartbroken. I want you to look around. "This is what democracy looks like."

Labour MPs John McDonnell Sir Keir Starmer, Emily Thornberry and Diane Abbott came out to cheers from the crowds while David Lammy had his say in a speech on preparing for a people's vote.

Sir Keir said: "What we have done is historic because we defeated Johnson again We are not going to let him to rip us out with this sellout deal and we have just won by 16 votes."

Ms Abbott said that she is a Remainer and her constituency of Hackney is strongly pro-Remain.

Shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry and Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell on stage during an anti-Brexit rally
PA

"We want to live in an open, inclusive, outward-looking world," she added.

Ms Thornberry said she was told there are over a million protesters.

"You are on the streets, it doesn't matter which parties you support and what your political backgrounds are," she added.

Television chef Rick Stein shared an image of himself at the march, declaring "We are European", while food critic Jay Rayner tweeted from the protest: "We march because we have to."

Protesters are making their way through central London towards Parliament Square, where Great British Bake Off presenter Sandi Toksvig and opposition MPs are due to address the crowds, including Labour's Jess Phillips and Liberal Democrat Luciana Berger.

One group of protesters spotted near Downing Street were pulling a float depicting Number 10 aide Dominic Cummings using Mr Johnson as a puppet.

With "Demonic Cummings" splashed across its forehead, the figure on the float appears to be wearing a Nazi uniform, including an armband which reads Get Brexit Done, and has a Union Jack moustache.

Star Trek actor Patrick Stewart addresses anti-Brexit supporters in London
AP

The float was being manned by Phil Jeanes, 67, who said he had driven the sculpture from Dusseldorf in Germany on Thursday night.

Mr Jeanes is part of a group called EU Flag Mafia, and has lived in Essen for the last nine years with his German wife.

He said the float had been specifically designed for the People's Vote march by the German artist Jacques Tilly.

It is the fourth model designed by the artist, who also made a sculpture of Theresa May with her nose impaling a man in a bowler hat.

"He put 14 sketches together and we chose what we thought would be the best," Mr Jeanes, who is retired, said.

"I suppose we were always intending to do a float for this march and you have to wait and see what is happening at the time."

Meanwhile, pro-Brexit activists also gathered in Westminster

Jason Hurt, 48, from Sheffield, was sporting a "I voted Leave" T-shirt, and said he feels people who voted for Brexit are being ignored.

"I voted Leave, I want my voice heard," he said.

"It is always about the Remainers, never about the Leavers. There are 17.4 million of us, we never get our voices heard."

Pam Julian, from Bermondsey, south-east London, held a sign which read: "Screw EU, we want our country back" - but said she has nothing against Europe.

The 68-year-old said Brexit is about regaining her independence.

"It is not just about trade or what Boris is saying. The main thing is to regain our independence, to be able to self-govern," she said.

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